Rudolf Magnus Institute of Neuroscience, University Medical Center Utrecht, Neuroimaging Division, The Netherlands.
Eur Neuropsychopharmacol. 2010 Aug;20(8):519-34. doi: 10.1016/j.euroneuro.2010.03.008. Epub 2010 May 14.
Our brain is a network. It consists of spatially distributed, but functionally linked regions that continuously share information with each other. Interestingly, recent advances in the acquisition and analysis of functional neuroimaging data have catalyzed the exploration of functional connectivity in the human brain. Functional connectivity is defined as the temporal dependency of neuronal activation patterns of anatomically separated brain regions and in the past years an increasing body of neuroimaging studies has started to explore functional connectivity by measuring the level of co-activation of resting-state fMRI time-series between brain regions. These studies have revealed interesting new findings about the functional connections of specific brain regions and local networks, as well as important new insights in the overall organization of functional communication in the brain network. Here we present an overview of these new methods and discuss how they have led to new insights in core aspects of the human brain, providing an overview of these novel imaging techniques and their implication to neuroscience. We discuss the use of spontaneous resting-state fMRI in determining functional connectivity, discuss suggested origins of these signals, how functional connections tend to be related to structural connections in the brain network and how functional brain communication may form a key role in cognitive performance. Furthermore, we will discuss the upcoming field of examining functional connectivity patterns using graph theory, focusing on the overall organization of the functional brain network. Specifically, we will discuss the value of these new functional connectivity tools in examining believed connectivity diseases, like Alzheimer's disease, dementia, schizophrenia and multiple sclerosis.
我们的大脑是一个网络。它由空间上分布的、但功能上相互连接的区域组成,这些区域不断地相互共享信息。有趣的是,功能神经影像学数据采集和分析方面的最新进展,促进了人类大脑功能连接的探索。功能连接被定义为解剖分离的脑区之间神经元激活模式的时间依赖性,近年来,越来越多的神经影像学研究开始通过测量静息态 fMRI 时间序列之间脑区的共同激活水平来探索功能连接。这些研究揭示了关于特定脑区和局部网络功能连接的有趣新发现,以及大脑网络中功能通讯整体组织的重要新见解。在这里,我们概述了这些新方法,并讨论了它们如何为人类大脑的核心方面提供新的见解,提供了这些新的成像技术的概述及其对神经科学的意义。我们讨论了自发静息态 fMRI 在确定功能连接中的应用,讨论了这些信号的潜在来源,功能连接如何倾向于与大脑网络中的结构连接相关,以及功能大脑通讯如何在认知表现中发挥关键作用。此外,我们将讨论使用图论来检查功能连接模式的即将到来的领域,重点关注功能大脑网络的整体组织。具体来说,我们将讨论这些新的功能连接工具在检查阿尔茨海默病、痴呆、精神分裂症和多发性硬化等被认为是连接性疾病中的价值。